From Marcus Aurelius VII

From Marcus Aurelius VII

“6. So many who were remembered already forgotten, and those remembered them long gone.”

Excerpt From: Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius. “Meditations.” Book # 7

VI. How many whose praises used once to be sung so loudly are now regulated to oblivion; and how many of the singers themselves have long passed from our sight?

Excerpt From: Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius. “Meditations.” Book # 7

  • VI. Let not things future trouble thee. For if necessity so require that they come to pass, thou shalt (whensoever that is) be provided for them with the same reason, by which whatsoever is now present, is made both tolerable and acceptable unto thee. All things are linked and knitted together, and the knot is sacred, neither is there anything in the world, that is not kind and natural in regard of any other thing, or, that hath not some kind of reference and natural correspondence with whatsoever is in the world besides. For all things are ranked together, and by that decency of its due place and order that each particular doth observe, they all concur together to the making of one and the same (“Kosmos” ed) or world: as if you said, a comely piece, or an orderly composition. For all things throughout, there is but one and the same order; and through all things, one and the same God, the same substance and the same law.There is one common reason, and one common truth, that belongs unto all reasonable creatures, for neither is there save one perfection of all creatures that are of the same kind, and partakers of the same reason.
Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius (Loeb Classical Library)

Delphi Complete Works of Marcus Aurelius – Marcus Aurelius

Meditations – Marcus Aurelius & Gregory Hays

Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)

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